Mississippi Women

Untitled, n.d., by Mae Helen Flowers. On loan from the Collection of Carolyn Carothers.

Untitled, n.d., by Mae Helen Flowers. On loan from the Collection of Carolyn Carothers.

 

Mississippi Women highlights works by fifteen Mississippi women artists of the 20th century. For most, their gender, geographic origin, and timeline are where their similarities end. Their choice of mediums vary widely from painting on a pair of shoes, to the traditional oil on canvas, or encaustic pigmented wax on copper plate. A strong Southern Baptist faith may play a central theme in one artist’s work, while other artists have chosen nonrepresentational styles such as decorative post minimalism or abstract expressionism.

Spring Family Activity Days! 2019

Spring Family Activity Day graphic
The University of Mississippi Museum
Cost: FREE!
The Museum offers fun-filled activity days for children to experience with their families. These events coincide with exhibits, holidays, and other special events—enriching the museum experience for all ages.

Watercolor Wonders Family Day

Watercolor Wonders Family Day

RESCHEDULED: SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 2019
10:00 a.m. – NOON (DROP-IN)
Families with children of all ages, join us as we explore our special exhibit, Visual Abundance: Realism in Watercolor, and experiment with watercolor painting.

 

Flock Together Family Day

Flock Together Family Day

SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 2019
10:00 a.m. – NOON (DROP-IN)
Families of a feather, flock together! Join us for this fun-filled family day inspired by our special exhibit The Art of Identification as we create a variety of projects inspired by our winged friends.

 

Questions? Contact Emily McCauley at esdean@olemiss.edu or 662-915-7073.

Curator Club • Spring 2020

Curator Club logo

THE MARCH 19TH CURATOR CLUB DATE HAS BEEN CANCELED Any future cancellations will be announced via email and also posted here.

A new program for tweens!

Share ideas, exchange opinions, and consider different perspectives about works of art in the University Museum’s collection and special exhibits. Meeting twice a month, students will explore our galleries and then use their experience as inspiration for art-making in the studio.

Save the date: Spring 2020 Curator Club registration is online and will begin on January 18th at 9:00 a.m.

 

Register Here

 

COST: $35 (semester fee) per family
for Museum Members at the Family level and above

$70 (semester fee) per family
for non-members

Every other Thursday, 4:15 – 5:15 p.m.

February 6–April 30, 2020
12 weeks | GRADES 5–6
THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI MUSEUM

Space is limited!

 

Email Stacy Bell at slbell@olemiss.edu with questions or to apply for a need-based scholarship.

Parent/Guardian Agreement:
By registering your child for Curator Club, you are agreeing to the following:

  • Children must be dressed in clothes that you do not mind getting dirty.
  • Students must be picked up by 5:25 P.M.
  • Children must adhere to the rules and discipline policy set by the UM Museum. After 3 notes home, a child will be asked not to return to the program.

Gallery Walkthrough: Maude Schuyler Clay & Langdon Clay

Laundromat (left) by Langdon Clay and Dog in Fog by Maude Schuyler Clay

Laundromat (left), 1977 by Langdon Clay and Dog in the Fog, 1997 by Maude Schuyler Clay.

 

Maude Clay (left) and Langdon Clay

Thursday
January 30, 2020

6:00 p.m.

UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI MUSEUM

 

Married for 40 years this past September, the Clays have both made careers as published photographers and are included in collections around the globe. Despite both having careers spanning more than 50 years, the couple has never exhibited their work side-by-side in a museum or gallery before now. Please join us for a walkthrough of the Clay’s current exhibit: Two Lives in Photography.

Film Photography Fun

child with camera and film background

with Langdon Clay

Thursday, January 30, 2020
3:45–5:00 P.M.

The University of Mississippi Museum
Cost: FREE!

The UM Museum is thrilled to welcome acclaimed photographer, Langdon Clay, to lead a live film developing demonstration. Experiment with black and white photography by taking and developing your own photograph, use printing-out paper to see images formed through the action of light alone, and more! Suitable for children grades K-12.

Space is limited. Pre-registration is required.

Email Stacy Bell @ slbell@olemiss.edu to reserve your spot by Wednesday, January 29.

Film Photography Fun

child with camera and film background

with Langdon Clay

EVENT IS FULL

Please email Stacy Bell @ slbell@olemiss.edu to get on the waitlist.

Thurs., Dec. 5, 2019
3:45–5:00 P.M.

The University of Mississippi Museum
Cost: FREE!

The UM Museum is thrilled to welcome acclaimed photographer, Langdon Clay, to lead a live film developing demonstration. Experiment with black and white photography by taking and developing your own photograph, use printing-out paper to see images formed through the action of light alone, and more! Suitable for children grades K–12.

An Evening with the Artist: Maude Schuyler Clay & Langdon Clay

Laundromat (left) by Langdon Clay and Dog in Fog by Maude Schuyler Clay

Laundromat (left), 1977 by Langdon Clay and Dog in the Fog, 1997 by Maude Schuyler Clay.

 

Maude Clay (left) and Langdon Clay

Thursday
December 5, 2019

6:00 p.m.

UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI MUSEUM

 

Married for 40 years this past September, the Clays have both made careers as published photographers and are included in collections around the globe. Despite both having careers spanning more than 50 years, the couple has never exhibited their work side-by-side in a museum or gallery before now. Please join us for a lecture and walkthrough of the Clay’s current exhibit: Two Lives in Photography.

What Makes a Quilt a Southern Quilt?

 


Mary W. Kerr

Wednesday, January 22, 2020
6:00 p.m.

Reception at 6:00 p.m. and lecture at 6:30 p.m.
Guest Lecturer, Mary W. Kerr, is an American Quilt Society certified appraiser and an award winning quilter. She has been teaching since 1987 and currently lectures and conducts workshops that focus on quilt history and the preservation of antique textiles.

circa 1945, 72" x 76". This sampler was make by an unknown quilter in Mississippi. Collection of the Art Fund, Inc. at the Birmingham Museum of Art; gift of Helen and Robert Cargo. Photo by Sean Pathasema.

Circa 1945, 72 inches x 76 inches. This sampler was make by an unknown quilter in Mississippi. Collection of the Art Fund, Inc. at the Birmingham Museum of Art; gift of Helen and Robert Cargo. Photo by Sean Pathasema

 

This lecture is part of Oxford Fiber Arts Festival pre-festival events.

January 23–26, 2020

POWERHOUSE
413 S. 14th Street

 
Friends of the Museum
Program Support Provided by the Friends of the Museum

 

Reimagining the Permanent Collection

 
Seymour Lawrence Gallery

DIRECTOR’S LETTER

Photo of Robert Saarnio by Kevin Bain/Ole Miss CommunicationsWarmest of Fall greetings from your University Museum, where we conclude our institution’s 80th anniversary year with a high volume of exceptional programs and exhibitions. In this season, our Museum team has been notably strengthened by the arrival of our new Preparator, Travis Turner. Travis completed his undergraduate degree at Allegheny College near his hometown of Meadville, Penn., and relocated to Oxford from Pittsburgh, Penn. area in early October.

The Prepartor position entails duties of fabrication, carpentry, and light construction, as well as mount-making, lighting, and assistance with all exhibition installations. Travis’s considerable experience with exhibition fabrication in his college’s art gallery, during a Smithsonian internship, and a 2018 professional contract position advanced his submittal of interest unequivocally to the top tier of a very extensive candidate pool. On your next visit to the Museum, keep an eye out for our newest colleague, and say hello to Travis!

On the subject of exhibitions, let me call your attention to an emerging new direction, of which early manifestations you may already have seen in the galleries—an increasing focus on mining the 20,000+ artworks and artifacts Permanent Collection for our temporary exhibitions rotations. While we have always shared elements of the permanent holdings, under the leadership and vision of Collections Manager Melanie Antonelli we are notably increasing their presence in the galleries.

In coming issues of 5th & University, we will take up further explorations of this topic, but I will briefly highlight here some of the changes that are coming, or are already well underway:

  • With the relocation and reinstallation of the Greek and Roman Antiquities collections within the 1939 Mary Buie Museum galleries, the gallery space long dedicated to their display will now transition to sub-galleries of Permanent Collection highlights, including a much more prominent series of installations of the Southern Folk Art collections. The flexible divisibility of space in this section of the building via their temporary-wall systems, presents particular opportunities for smaller-scale viewing, one example being the mix of Audubon Prints and Boehm ceramic birds that have been on view in recent months.
  • Long-displayed primarily in the Speakers Gallery, our acclaimed and uniquely comprehensive holdings of the works of artist Theora Hamblett will now be displayed on a rotating basis in the gallery known as the Lower Skipwith at the bottom of the ramp beyond the scientific instruments.
  • Our Speakers Gallery will itself transition to begin displaying highlights from the Permanent Collection of primarily Mississippi artists, with a current installation titled Mississippi Women, which exhibits works of 15 artists of the 20th century, representing a wide range of backgrounds, artistic influences, and periods.
  • And a note regarding the very innovative use of an end cap of gallery wall immediately to the left as one enters the Hattie Mae Edmonds gallery from the Lobby: Melanie and her student assistants are curating themed selections of works in a pop-up manner that rotate on a more frequently. In addition to giving her student interns a co-curating experience under her guidance, this pop-up approach permits the accommodation of themes that are either special topic, such as the Mary Buie Museum Collection pieces on display currently, or seasonal, such as Black History Month.
  • We’ve also begun a more creative use of the case along the hallway to the Education classrooms, which currently showcases very spooky pieces from the permanent collection.
  • You may have noticed the exquisitely beautiful reinstallation of the Seymour Lawrence Gallery, where the modern 20th century works there have expanded interpretive labels, a dramatic new wall color, and a long-needed introductory panel which is smartly flanked by the exceptional Georgia O’Keefe abstraction of Lake George.

In this new direction, we will, of course, continue our temporary exhibitions programming of loaned shows and borrowed works that we curate, such as the current Two Lives in Photography: Maude Schuyler Clay and Langdon Clay, which remains on view through February 15, 2020.

Please join us throughout the Fall to appreciate these new directions, which celebrate so smartly and innovatively the Museum’s extraordinarily wide spectrum of artworks and artifacts in our highly distinguished Permanent Collection.

 
Robert Saarnio's signature
Robert Saarnio 
Museum Director

 

 

Pumpkin Carving Contest

Jack-o-lanterns

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2019, 5:00 P.M.

Come to the museum for a pumpkin carving contest.